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Supervising for Excellence

Learn the importance of active listening in various supervisory contexts, including problem-solving, negotiation, and understanding differing perspectives. Develop effective listening behaviors and improve understanding in order to foster cooperation and support your team.

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Supervising for Excellence

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  1. Supervising for Excellence Part One: Self as Supervisor DAY THREE Florida Department of Children and Families

  2. Part One: Day Three Overview • Listening Skills • Use of Power • Time Management • Making Meetings Work • Culminating Project—Proposals

  3. Verbal vs. Non-Verbal Communication

  4. Active Listening A process which requires the listener to focus on both the content of what is being said, & the emotion with which it is expressed.

  5. Active Listening Active listening allows the listener to gain more information and improve understanding. It facilitates cooperation!

  6. Listening is Part of the Job • As a supervisor, you’ll need to use listening skills in a variety of contexts everyday: • Gather data to solve problems. • Understand other points of view in order to negotiate. • Listen to differing perspectives on an issue.

  7. Listening is Part of the Job • Input – Talented employees want to be heard and recognized for their contributions. • Motivation – What gets them up each morning and keeps them on the job? • Challenges – What are they struggling with? How can you help them?

  8. An Active Listener • Looks and sounds interested . • Understands the speaker’s point of view. • Clarifies the speaker’s thoughts and feelings. • Shows genuine concern. • Uses “I Statements” NOT “You Statements.” • Knows when to remain silent.

  9. Benefits of Active Listening • Yields more information • Improves understanding • Facilitates cooperation • Makes person feel understood • Good fall-back position when dealing with tension/conflict

  10. Characteristics of Active Listening • Reflects understanding • Empathy • Listening for meaning • Concentration/focus • Letting the other person know she/he is heard

  11. Active Listening Behaviors • Get the story • Probe/clarify meaning • Listen for and respond to emotions • Summarize • Value Silence

  12. Get the Story • Encourage the speaker • Ask open-ended questions • Draw out background/context • Clarify and check understanding

  13. Probe/Clarify Meanings • Use questions that take the speaker’s understanding a step deeper, • or brings out the meaning or significance of the situation for the speaker.

  14. Listen for and Respond to Emotion • Be aware of non-verbal cues • Name the emotion in a way that validates it • Allow venting

  15. Summarize • Make a “story” out of what you’ve heard • Try to capture what’s most important to the speaker • Include main facts, issues, concerns, feelings, perceptions • Check accuracy…

  16. Value Silence • Don’t rush to respond. Allow time for the person talking to collect his/her thoughts if necessary • Give time for answering questions • Silence allows a person to hear himself and formulate thoughts more clearly

  17. Seven Bases of Power

  18. Our Own Worst Enemies • Procrastination • Pre-Task Avoidance Rituals (PTAs) • Small Irritants Create Huge Obstacles

  19. Know Your Problem Areas • Work environment • Lack skills • Lack reward • Lack of Clarity • Disorganization • Wasting time

  20. To-Do List • Great organizational tools. • Free our minds from having to remember everything we have to do.

  21. The Problem with To-Do List • If the to-do list hasn’t been concretized into actual action steps… • the to-do list may still feel overwhelming. HOWEVER!

  22. Sample To Do List Item • “Get ready for conference presentation”

  23. Sample Action List Item Get ready for conference presentation. Decide on topic Research articles Read articles Write outline

  24. T.I.M.E. T To Do List- the list is only a guide, a reminder of what needs to be done, and it helps shape the big picture for the day. I Immediate designation means that you do this activity within the first half-hour! Must do means that if you do not complete this activity by the end of the day, there will be adverse consequences for clients, the agency, staff, or self. M E Extended over an expected period of time.

  25. What to do with an Action List Delegate it Do it Schedule it

  26. 80/20 Rule Need Not Apply • Scheduling is the process of looking at time available and planning how to use it to achieve the goals and tasks you have identified.

  27. Purpose of Scheduling • Scheduling is where the aspirations of your goals and tasks on your action list ……..meet the hard reality of the time you have available. • Schedule everything you can!

  28. Scheduling Properly • Define what can be realistically achieved • Plan to make best use of time • Devote time to things that MUST be done • Reserve contingency time for “unexpected” • Minimize stress by helping you avoid over-commitment

  29. How To Schedule • Add your action list to your schedule! • Review Action List • Schedule high-priority activities • Schedule tasks that cannot be delegated or avoided • Schedule time for the unexpected • Block out time for interuptions • Share your schedule • Educate staff on the concept of “urgent need”

  30. Purpose of Meetings • Face to face? • Send an email or memo? • Choose best method of communication • Be respectful of other people’s time • Make them count!

  31. Facilitator’s Role • Provide structure • Balance content with process • Plan and prepare!

  32. Three Components of a Meeting • Announce things • Decide things • Brainstorm about things

  33. Meeting Planning

  34. The Agenda Bell Beginning Middle End • Welcome • Introductions • Ground Rules • Minutes • Announcements • Easy Action Items • Discussion • Action • Moderate Decision Items • Discussion • Decision • Hardest Decision Item • Discussion Only • Next Steps • Brainstorming • Easy/Trivial Items • Wrap Up • Summarize • Task Assignment

  35. Decision Making and Brainstorming Decision Making • Topics that will become decision items at future meetings • Generates potential solutions • Brings people back together and working towards the same goal • Helps heal the emotional scars that decision making leaves Brainstorming • Heart of the meeting • Breaks up group cohesion • Causes people to become winners and losers • May leave emotional scars • Done before brainstorming

  36. Roles in Meetings • Chair/Leader • Facilitator • Timekeeper • Recorder/Scribe • Group Member

  37. End of Day One Thank you for participating today.

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